Schlagwörter
dam, local communities, lived experiences, environmental narratives, Cambodia, transitions, water management regimes, water resource management, niches, visions, agency, ocean governance, fisheries management, ecosystem-based management, overfishing, sustainable fishing, European Union, Turkey, Europeanisation, institutions, policy transfer, Water Framework Directive, drinking water, agriculture, EU policy, governance, integrated scientific support, water quality, nitrates, pesticides, environmental policy, policy coherence, environmental governance, integrated catchment management, catchment, conservation authorities, governance, governmentality, integrated water resources management (IWRM), watershed councils, Ontario, Oregon, Integrated Water Resources Management, Integrated Urban Water Management, urban water security, governance, Singapore, Hong Kong, process tracing, Water Framework Directive, policy implementation, integrated water resources management, river basin planning, public participation, water governance, scale, top-down and bottom-up, estuaries, governance, sustainability, governance models, integrated water resources management, IWRM, Water Framework Directive, WFD, participation, United Kingdom, England, water governance, IWRM, integrated water resources management, drivers, EU water framework directive, implementation, coordination, participation, Germany, water governance, polycentricity, integrated water resources management, IWRM, policy transfer, water governance, Water Framework Directive, learning